"They're employed with money made from mustering and selling the camels that we muster," he said.

"So it's been very successful in terms of Indigenous employment, in terms of controlling problem camels and in terms of establishing a new business in remote Aboriginal Australia,"

Mr Knight says the company hopes to muster in the Northern Territory to ease large congregations near communities, such as the one seen in Docker River in 2009.

"We could get those camels easily; for us that's an easy opportunity for mustering," he said.

"Our Indigenous members are talking with their countrymen over the border about this.

"We hope the Territory Government will do the sensible thing when it comes to problem animals descending on Docker River and work with us to muster them rather than leaving them to waste."

In a statement, the Northern Territory Department of Land Resource Management says it's supportive of the development of economic opportunities through the harvest of camels as well as other feral animals, but this is "dependent on the development of sound business models of the proponents".

It also confirms that it's investing in further aerial culling south west of Alice Springs to take place during April and May this year, to "strategically knock down camel numbers further".